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俄羅斯電影大學演講稿

發布時間:2023-03-15 14:49:54

⑴ 求如何實現你的夢想——著名導演,電影製片人傑里·朱克英語原文演講稿,你的回答講給我很大的幫助,拜求!

Thank you Chancellor Wiley, distinguished platform party, friends, guests and the
very reason for our presence here today — the members of the class of 2003.

Before I start my remarks, I'd like everyone just to do something for me. Very simply
— so everyone can kind of just get to know everyone else — on the count of three, I'd
like everyone to turn around and shake the hand of the person sitting right behind you.
One, two, three — right now, everybody, please do that.

So, I guess you still have a few things to learn.

My parents cried when I left for California. Not because I was leaving, (but) rather, I
think, because they were afraid I'd be coming back. Not one teacher I ever had in
grade school, high school or college would've believed that there was even the
slightest chance that one day I would be asked to give the commencement address at a
major university.

Many, given the opportunity, would'櫻差歲慶局ve bet large sums of money against it, putting up
their homes and children as collateral. Actually, I really like the idea of that, not
because I'm vindictive — although in a few minutes I'm going to read the names of all
the people in my life who never thought I would amount to anything — but because
life should be unpredictable. And I'm very grateful that I never wasted any time trying
to become somebody else's image of what I should be.

So, thirty-one years ago today, I drove from Madison, Wisconsin, to Los Angeles,
California. On the way, I passed Camp Randall, where my
college graation
ceremony was in progress. I thought about going to the ceremony, but it meant I
would've arrived in Hollywood one day later, and at the time I just didn'脊睜t see the point.
I wanted to get there.

Gertrude Stein once said about Hollywood, "When you get there, there is no 'there'
there." That's true. However, there will be a swimming pool and tennis court. In the

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end, though, it's probably not enough to justify a life's journey. Getting there,
particularly in show business, is tough enough.
You need a combination of talent,
ambition, luck and a willingness to tell actors how beautiful they look today.

In retrospect, getting there was the easy part. Finding a "there" there is much harder.
So today, before you get into your cars and race off to the rest of your lives, I want to
give you some advice on how to get there. And I want to help make sure that when
you get there, you find a "there" there.

To that end, I will give you my five rules to think about, quickly forget, but years
from now kick yourself for not having listened to.

#1:
Don't think about your future, especially right now. You'll miss my speech. There
will be plenty of time to contemplate your future right after the ceremony, but then
you'll miss all the celebrating and alation. So just wait until you get home and have
a good think about something that will happen in the future that will make you happy.

When I graated from college, I spent a lot of time thinking about how cool it would
be to be on the Johnny Carson show. A few years later, it happened. We appeared on
the "Tonight" show, Joey Bishop was the guest host. We were dreadful. For years I ran
into people who would stop me and say, "Hey, I saw you on the "Tonight" show. Huh...
What's Joey Bishop like?" Eventually I got over the embarrassment, but I never got
those years back — years I spent waiting for some future event to make me happy. I
had tricked myself into thinking, "As soon as I get there, I'll be OK."

I work in a business where almost everyone is waiting
for the next big thing.
Sometimes it comes, and sometimes it doesn't. But it doesn't matter that your dream
came true if you spent your whole life sleeping.
So get out there and go for it, but
don't be caught waiting. It's great to plan for your future. Just don't live there, because
really nothing ever happens in the future. Whatever happens happens now, so live
your life where the action is — now. And one more thing: If you're going to be on
television, don't call your friends and tell them to watch until after you've seen it.

#2:
Don't do anything that 30 years from now you'll look back at and say, "Oh, my
God, why the hell did I do that?!" I wish I had a nickel for every time I heard
someone start a sentence with, "If only, when I was younger, I would have...." So I did
a little informal survey for you, and I found out that, amazingly, all these people had
the same regret. When they graated from college, sadly, they bought furniture.

This probably needs a little explanation. Right at this moment in your life, you are in a
unique position that you may never ever be in again. You have nothing to lose.
Everything you have acquired of value is locked inside you. If you have a dream, now
is the time to pursue it, before you buy furniture.

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I was one of the lucky ones. I graated from the University of Wisconsin with no
employable skills, unless you count jury ty. It meant I had to start from scratch and
figure out where I fit in. I didn't have money, but I could afford to fail, and there were
many failures. But I found out what I was good at. I found something I loved. And
now I have furniture — lots of furniture.

#3:
Mrs. Zubatsky's law. One day when I was a kid, our house caught on fire in
Milwaukee. A large section of the wood shingle roof was burning as the fire trucks
pulled up. The firemen ran into the back yard with a large hose and began assembling
their metal ladders and positioning them against the house.

Mrs. Zubatsky was our next door neighbor and, at the time, she was standing on her
upstairs porch taking in the laundry. She watched anxiously as the firemen struggled
with their ladders. Suddenly she leaned over the balcony and shouted down to the
professional firefighters, "Forget the ladders! Just point the hose at the fire!" The
firemen, to their credit, responded immediately. They dropped their ladders, pointed
the hose at the fire and extinguished the blaze in about 40 seconds.

There are two morals to this story. One, never assume that just because it's someone's
job, they know how to do it. And two, don't let yourself be intimidated by
professionals or their uniforms.

Growing up in Wisconsin, I never knew anyone in the movie business. I never even
knew anyone who knew anyone in the movie business. That world had a mystique
that made it seem unattainable to me. But, like Mrs. Zubatsky, I sat on my porch and I
watched someone else do it, and I said, "I have a better idea." And like her, I seized
the moment.

If you have a better idea, if your plan makes more sense, if you have a vision, then put
down your laundry and scream a little bit. Throw your hat into the ring and never let
the
professionals or their uniforms prevent you from telling anyone where to point
their hose.

#4:

If you're going to fail, fail big. If you don't, you're
never going to make a
difference. Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes. Art is knowing which
ones to keep. Ask yourself one question: If I didn't have to do it perfectly, what would
I try? For many of you, the biggest obstacle to getting there will be the fear that you
have carried with your since childhood — the fear of humiliation, of embarrassment,
of ridicule. That is SO stupid! Oh ... sorry. But really, you have to stop caring about
that, which brings me to Travolta's law.

My brother David and Jim Abrahams and I were having pie at Rumpelmeyer's Coffee
Shop in New York on the day after our third movie, "Top Secret," opened. The
reviews were terrible and it was bombing at the box office. We were really getting

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into some serious moping and self-flagellation when John Travolta walked in. We
knew him from the Paramount lot and he could see right away that we were in a funk.
We immediately poured out our heart to him, explaining the pain of our humiliating
misfortune.

I'm not sure what we were expecting, but John just smiled and said, "Guys, the thing
you have to remember is (that) nobody else is paying as much attention to your
failures as you are. You're the only ones who are obsessed with the importance of
your own life. To everyone else, it's just a blip on the radar screen, so just move on.
By the way, are you going to finish that pie?"

I found that advice very liberating — that the only one who my big failure was truly
big for was me. So I thanked him and told him how beautiful he looked today, and
now when I fail big, I just go out and have a piece of apple pie and I move on. And I
always save a little piece for John Travolta. Amazingly, more often than not he shows
up to eat it.

The next time you go into a restaurant, please don't look at the waitress and say, "Can
I get some ketchup?" You're supposed to say, "May I please have some ketchup?"
Sorry — that doesn't count. Just a personal pet peeve of mine.

#5:
Don't overuse the word "love." Everyone overuses the word "love." "I love your
shoes." "I just love the new Justin Guarini CD." "I really love those little things they
put on the chicken sandwiches at Subway." In Hollywood, they say "Love ya, babe!"
So, OK, I get it. It's just the way people talk and it's probably harmless, but you
shouldn't forget the real thing. The real thing is great. It's just not so easy with actual
human beings, but if you work at it and you get it right, it will make you happier than
anything else you do in your life.

Think of the world as a big glass of water with some salt in it. You have a choice. You
can try to pick out all the salt or you can keep pouring in more water so eventually it
gets less bitter. As you begin your new journey, you can try to remove everything that
you find distasteful in the world, or you can just pour in more love. It's the only thing
that the more you give away, the more you have.

⑵ 推薦一部電影作文 演講稿

你好

超凡蜘蛛俠2》是迄今為止今年最好看的3D大片,視覺效果遠勝《美國隊長2》。

雖然部分劇情稍顯拖沓和凌亂,但非同凡響的動作場面和極其出色的3D視覺效果足以彌補這些不足。大銀幕上,帕克在曼哈頓街頭上下翻飛,主客觀鏡頭相互切換,那感覺——簡直爽爆了!

也只有蜘蛛俠這樣的電影才能讓觀眾們在電影院里體驗到腎上腺素飆升的快感,從這一點來說,《超凡蜘蛛俠2》是一部只適合於在電影院里看的電影,當然銀幕越大越好。

由於有老三部曲在前,新版《超凡蜘蛛俠》上映之時,難免會過多的被拿

出來同老版進行比較。雖然《超凡》系列的口碑要好於舊版,但硬要說好

出多少,真的是在伯仲之間。但《超凡蜘蛛俠2》無論從哪個方面來講都

更加出色,堪稱《蜘蛛俠》系列中最為好看的一部。

⑶ 能否幫忙寫3分鍾演講稿(高中生)!關於電影的

大家上午/下午好:
我演講的主題是「生命的重量」。
當一片潔白輕盈的羽毛上下翩飛時,電影的主人公阿甘為我們娓娓道來他自己的故事。一個智商只有75的孩子,憑借愛、真誠、勇氣甚至是一些運氣,獲得了許多成功。他的人生充滿單親母親的愛,黑人戰友的信任,叛逆潔妮的尊重。最終,丹長官也與他化敵為友。
《阿甘正傳》的背景貫穿美國歷史,其中包括肯尼迪遇刺、中美建交、人權運動。這部電影不僅僅提供了趣味的情節,更提供了一個不同視角的人生觀、世界觀。當時的人精神虛空,渴望追隨時代的引領者。「聰明人」不一定擁有真誠、勇敢、熱忱的品質。對待生活,「聰明人」也難以處變不驚。
正如電影中的對白:「生活就象一盒巧克力,你永遠也不知道會拿到哪一顆」,因此,面對生活的起起浮浮,一顆平常心顯得尤為重要。你可以把生命看得很重,珍惜生命中的每一個人、每一件事,即使那人曾傷害過你,那事曾讓你痛苦不堪。你也可以把生命看得很輕,正如阿甘母親所說的:「死亡是生命的一部分,是我們所有人命中註定的事」。生命總會慢慢走向無盡的深淵,你不必太過記恨別人的過失,也不要對失去的東西耿耿於懷。或許生命就象是一片潔白輕巧的羽毛,隨命運之風四處飄盪。

—— (原創)

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